Our Mutual Friend (1998) BBC Series

Laura

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For those of you who have enjoyed Bleak House, http://cassiopaea.org/forum/index.php/topic,32829.0.html, you may next want to turn to "Our Mutual Friend" for great drama, insight, "positive dissociation" that leads to gaining knowledge and could be the subject of many discussions.

Our Mutual Friend (written in the years 1864–65) is the last novel completed by Charles Dickens and is one of his most sophisticated works, combining psychological insight with social analysis. It centres on, in the words of critic J. Hillis Miller, "money, money, money, and what money can make of life" but is also about human values. ...

Dickens also explores the conflict between doing what society expects of you, or being true to yourself in Our Mutual Friend. Much of what society expects of a person may be shown through the influence of one's family. In many of Dickens's novels, including Our Mutual Friend and Little Dorrit, parents try and force their children into arranged marriages, which, although suitable in terms of money, are not suitable in other ways.

Winner: 1999: British Academy of Film and Television Arts - Best Design, Best Drama Serial, Best Sound, Best Make Up

Nominated: 1999: Broadcasting Press Guild Awards - Best Actor, Best Drama
 
Wow, thanks for this! I REALLY enjoyed watching Bleak House, which is one of my favorite novels along with Our Mutual Friend. Can't wait to watch this one!
 
Laura said:
For those of you who have enjoyed Bleak House, http://cassiopaea.org/forum/index.php/topic,32829.0.html, you may next want to turn to "Our Mutual Friend" for great drama, insight, "positive dissociation" that leads to gaining knowledge and could be the subject of many discussions.

...
Ordered, if it's as good as Bleak House, it will be great 'positive dissociation '. :rockon:
 
'Bleak House' was fantastic, made me hungry for more quality dramas so looking forward to this one. Just saw that BBC have a Dickens collection:

A Christmas Carol (1977)
A Tale of Two Cities (1980)
The Pickwick Papers (1985)
Oliver Twist (1985)
Martin Chuzzlewit (1994)
Our Mutual Friend (1998)
David Copperfield (1999)
Great Expectations (1999)

_http://www.bbcshop.com/drama+arts/charles-dickens-collection-dvd/invt/bbcdvd3637
 
Laura said:
For those of you who have enjoyed Bleak House, http://cassiopaea.org/forum/index.php/topic,32829.0.html, you may next want to turn to "Our Mutual Friend" for great drama, insight, "positive dissociation" that leads to gaining knowledge and could be the subject of many discussions.

In many of Dickens's novels, including Our Mutual Friend and Little Dorrit, parents try and force their children into arranged marriages, which, although suitable in terms of money, are not suitable in other ways.
I'd thoroughly recommend the BBC adaptation of Little Dorrit too: _http://www.bbc.co.uk/littledorrit/archive.shtml

Debtors prisons, government bureaucracy and ponzi schemes make it very relevant to hard times today. Without doubt, my favourite.
 
I just ordered Bleak House on DVD through Amazon and saw Our Mutual Friend on there as well at a really good price so I got both. Looking forward to watching it after finishing Bleak House!
 
parallel said:
'Bleak House' was fantastic, made me hungry for more quality dramas so looking forward to this one. Just saw that BBC have a Dickens collection:

A Christmas Carol (1977)
A Tale of Two Cities (1980)
The Pickwick Papers (1985)
Oliver Twist (1985)
Martin Chuzzlewit (1994)
Our Mutual Friend (1998)
David Copperfield (1999)
Great Expectations (1999)

_http://www.bbcshop.com/drama+arts/charles-dickens-collection-dvd/invt/bbcdvd3637

That's a great list. Too bad they don't have The Old Curiosity Shop included. I wonder if they're all as good as BBC's Bleak House series.
 
SeekinTruth said:
parallel said:
'Bleak House' was fantastic, made me hungry for more quality dramas so looking forward to this one. Just saw that BBC have a Dickens collection:

A Christmas Carol (1977)
A Tale of Two Cities (1980)
The Pickwick Papers (1985)
Oliver Twist (1985)
Martin Chuzzlewit (1994)
Our Mutual Friend (1998)
David Copperfield (1999)
Great Expectations (1999)

_http://www.bbcshop.com/drama+arts/charles-dickens-collection-dvd/invt/bbcdvd3637

That's a great list. Too bad they don't have The Old Curiosity Shop included. I wonder if they're all as good as BBC's Bleak House series.

I saw all this set. There might be more interesting versions, for instance BBC's 2011 version of Great Expectations (_http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1949720/), but all them are pretty good and I absolutely loved them except for "A Christmas Carol" which was very slow but still fairly good.
 
SeekinTruth said:
That's a great list. Too bad they don't have The Old Curiosity Shop included. I wonder if they're all as good as BBC's Bleak House series.

I haven't seen all of them, but Bleak House was adapted by Andrew Davies, who also worked on the Little Dorritt adaptation (which I also love). He also did the great 1995 adaptation of Pride and Prejudice, the 2008 Sense and Sensibility, as well as the original House of Cards (which the Kevin Spacey version is based on). Looking on IMDB, he also did Vanity Fair, where I see this review:

There has been a ridiculous number of movies about psychopathic killers - Silence of the Lambs, Se7en, Copycat, The Cell, etc, etc - and yet for a realistic depiction of a psychopath, this mini-series leaves them all far behind. If you want to see what the average psychopath is like (or perhaps I should say above average, because there is nothing average about Becky Sharp), this is far more true to life than all the others. The reality is that for every Hannibal Lecter in the world, there are a thousand Becky Sharps, and together they do far more damage than all the serial killers. I can only think that Thackeray must have known someone like her, because you can't get this close to reality by sheer imagination, and I don't know of any literary examples he could have copied from.

Of course, the novel, and the series, are about far more than one character

they are in fact about Vanity Fair, the world that Thackerary knew and

didn't particularly love, the society which was so warped and hypocritical (rather like ours today, in fact) that it allowed characters like Becky Sharp to prosper.

This is not nearly as pleasant as the usual BBC mini-series, but it is compulsively watchable; the depiction is almost flawless and Natasha Little does a brilliant job portraying the woman we love to hate. The rest of the cast is also excellent, including Nathaniel Parker as Rawdon, the principal victim of his wife's intrigues, Philip Glenister as the lovable but awfully clumsy Dobbin and David Bradley as the appalling baronet Sir Pitt Crawley.
 
Another useful series to watch for excellent learning is Forsyte Saga.
 
Approaching Infinity said:
SeekinTruth said:
That's a great list. Too bad they don't have The Old Curiosity Shop included. I wonder if they're all as good as BBC's Bleak House series.

I haven't seen all of them, but Bleak House was adapted by Andrew Davies, who also worked on the Little Dorritt adaptation (which I also love). He also did the great 1995 adaptation of Pride and Prejudice, the 2008 Sense and Sensibility, as well as the original House of Cards (which the Kevin Spacey version is based on). Looking on IMDB, he also did Vanity Fair, where I see this review:

There has been a ridiculous number of movies about psychopathic killers - Silence of the Lambs, Se7en, Copycat, The Cell, etc, etc - and yet for a realistic depiction of a psychopath, this mini-series leaves them all far behind. If you want to see what the average psychopath is like (or perhaps I should say above average, because there is nothing average about Becky Sharp), this is far more true to life than all the others. The reality is that for every Hannibal Lecter in the world, there are a thousand Becky Sharps, and together they do far more damage than all the serial killers. I can only think that Thackeray must have known someone like her, because you can't get this close to reality by sheer imagination, and I don't know of any literary examples he could have copied from.

Of course, the novel, and the series, are about far more than one character

they are in fact about Vanity Fair, the world that Thackerary knew and

didn't particularly love, the society which was so warped and hypocritical (rather like ours today, in fact) that it allowed characters like Becky Sharp to prosper.

This is not nearly as pleasant as the usual BBC mini-series, but it is compulsively watchable; the depiction is almost flawless and Natasha Little does a brilliant job portraying the woman we love to hate. The rest of the cast is also excellent, including Nathaniel Parker as Rawdon, the principal victim of his wife's intrigues, Philip Glenister as the lovable but awfully clumsy Dobbin and David Bradley as the appalling baronet Sir Pitt Crawley.

PAP & SAS were great, as well as "Emma". The vanity fair I've seen is the Reese Witherspoon & Gabriel Byrne version. I don't know if he had a hand in that, but I thought it was very good & Reese Witherspoon especially.
As an aside, but not up to the level of the BBC mini-series being discussed, I've found Catherine Cookson dramas to be really enjoyable. There are plenty of pathological types in her works, but for those struggling with British accents, you'll definitely need subtitles for the adaptations. They're all set in Tyneside (north of England) & the Geordie accent (Newcastle) is not always understood by brits "down south" (Londoners) either! "The Black Velvet Gown" or "Rag Nymph" are good entries. FWIW.
 
Finished watching Our Mutual Friend. It was also very well done, but seemed a little more condensed than the Bleak House adaptation. And the cinematography was a bit better in Bleak House. Nonetheless, another great adaptation with a great cast and performances - well worth watching for more positive dissociation experiences.
 
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